This document describes how you can monitor the status of network switches and routers. Some cheaper “unmanaged” switches and hubs don’t have IP addresses and are essentially invisible on your network, so there’s not any way to monitor them. More expensive switches and routers have addresses assigned to them and can be monitored by pinging them or using “SNMP” to query status information.

I’ll describe how you can monitor the following things on managed switches, hubs, and routers:

Packet loss, round trip average

“SNMP” status information

Bandwidth / traffic rate

These instructions assume that you’ve installed Shinken according to the quickstart guide. The sample configuration entries below reference objects that are defined in the sample config files (“commands.cfg”, “templates.cfg”, etc.) that are installed when you follow the quickstart.

Monitoring switches and routers can either be easy or more involved - depending on what equipment you have and what you want to monitor. As they are critical infrastructure components, you’ll no doubt want to monitor them in at least some basic manner.

Switches and routers can be monitored easily by “pinging” them to determine packet loss, RTA, etc. If your switch supports “SNMP”, you can monitor port status, etc. with the check_snmp plugin and bandwidth (if you’re using MRTG) with the check_mrtgtraf plugin.

The check_snmp plugin will only get compiled and installed if you have the net-snmp and net-snmp-utils packages installed on your system. Make sure the plugin exists in the monitoring-plugins directory before you continue. The path to this directory depend on your OS (example : /usr/lib/nagios/plugins). If it doesn’t, install net-snmp and net-snmp-utils and recompile/reinstall the Nagios plugins.

To make your life a bit easier, a few configuration tasks have already been done for you:

Two command definitions (check_snmp and check_local_mrtgtraf) have been added to the “commands.cfg” file. These allows you to use the check_snmp and check_mrtgtraf plugins to monitor network routers.

A switch host template (called generic-switch) has already been created in the “templates.cfg” file. This allows you to add new router/switch host definitions in a simple manner.

The above-mentioned config files can be found in the “/etc/shinken/objects/” directory. You can modify the definitions in these and other definitions to suit your needs better if you’d like. However, I’d recommend waiting until you’re more familiar with configuring Shinken before doing so. For the time being, just follow the directions outlined below and you’ll be monitoring your network routers/switches in no time.

The first time you configure Shinken to monitor a network switch, you’ll need to do a bit of extra work. Remember, you only need to do this for the first switch you monitor.

Edit the main Shinken config file.

linux:~ # vi /etc/shinken/nagios.cfg

Remove the leading pound (#) sign from the following line in the main configuration file:

#cfg_file=/etc/shinken/objects/switch.cfg

Save the file and exit.

What did you just do? You told Shinken to look to the “/etc/shinken/objects/switch.cfg” to find additional object definitions. That’s where you’ll be adding host and service definitions for routers and switches. That configuration file already contains some sample host, hostgroup, and service definitions. For the first router/switch you monitor, you can simply modify the sample host and service definitions in that file, rather than creating new ones.

Add a new host definition for the switch that you’re going to monitor. If this is the first switch you’re monitoring, you can simply modify the sample host definition in “switch.cfg”. Change the “host_name”, “alias”, and “address” fields to appropriate values for the switch.

define host{
use generic-switch ; Inherit default values from a template
host_name linksys-srw224p ; The name we're giving to this switch
alias Linksys SRW224P Switch ; A longer name associated with the switch
address 192.168.1.253 ; IP address of the switch
hostgroups allhosts,switches ; Host groups this switch is associated with
}

Now you can add some service definitions (to the same configuration file) to monitor different aspects of the switch. If this is the first switch you’re monitoring, you can simply modify the sample service definition in “switch.cfg”.

Replace linksys-srw224p in the example definitions below with the name you specified in the “host_name” directive of the host definition you just added.

Add the following service definition in order to monitor packet loss and round trip average between the Shinken host and the switch every 5 minutes under normal conditions.

define service{
use generic-service
host_name linksys-srw224p
service_description PING
check_command check_ping!200.0,20%!600.0,60%
normal_check_interval 5
retry_check_interval 1
}
# Inherit values from a template
# The name of the host the service is associated with
# The service description
# The command used to monitor the service
# Check the service every 5 minutes under normal conditions
# Re-check the service every minute until its final/hard state is determined

This service will be:

CRITICAL if the round trip average (RTA) is greater than 600 milliseconds or the packet loss is 60% or more

WARNING if the RTA is greater than 200 ms or the packet loss is 20% or more

OK if the RTA is less than 200 ms and the packet loss is less than 20%

In the “check_command” directive of the service definition above, the “-C public” tells the plugin that the “SNMP” community name to be used is “public” and the “-o sysUpTime.0” indicates which OID should be checked.

If you want to ensure that a specific port/interface on the switch is in an up state, you could add a service definition like this:

In the example above, the “-o ifOperStatus.1” refers to the OID for the operational status of port 1 on the switch.

The “-r 1” option tells the check_snmp plugin to return an OK state if “1” is found in the “SNMP” result (1 indicates an “up” state on the port) and CRITICAL if it isn’t found.

The “-m RFC1213-MIB” is optional and tells the check_snmp plugin to only load the “RFC1213-MIB” instead of every single MIB that’s installed on your system, which can help speed things up.

That’s it for the “SNMP” monitoring example. There are a million things that can be monitored via “SNMP”, so its up to you to decide what you need and want to monitor. Good luck!

You can usually find the OIDs that can be monitored on a switch by running the following command (replace 192.168.1.253 with the IP address of the switch): snmpwalk -v1 -c public 192.168.1.253 -m ALL .1

If you’re monitoring bandwidth usage on your switches or routers using MRTG, you can have Shinken alert you when traffic rates exceed thresholds you specify. The check_mrtgtraf plugin (which is included in the Nagios plugins distribution) allows you to do this.

You’ll need to let the check_mrtgtraf plugin know what log file the MRTG data is being stored in, along with thresholds, etc. In my example, I’m monitoring one of the ports on a Linksys switch. The MRTG log file is stored in “/var/lib/mrtg/192.168.1.253_1.log”. Here’s the service definition I use to monitor the bandwidth data that’s stored in the log file...

In the example above, the “/var/lib/mrtg/192.168.1.253_1.log” option that gets passed to the check_local_mrtgtraf command tells the plugin which MRTG log file to read from.

The AVG option tells it that it should use average bandwidth statistics. The “1000000,2000000” options are the warning thresholds (in bytes) for incoming traffic rates.

The “5000000,5000000” are critical thresholds (in bytes) for outgoing traffic rates. The “10” option causes the plugin to return a CRITICAL state if the MRTG log file is older than 10 minutes (it should be updated every 5 minutes).

Once you’ve added the new host and service definitions to the “switch.cfg” file, you’re ready to start monitoring the router/switch. To do this, you’ll need to verify your configuration and restart Sinken.

If the verification process produces any errors messages, fix your configuration file before continuing. Make sure that you don’t (re)start Shinken until the verification process completes without any errors!